The most common scenario for the origins of the Black Death, i.e., the second pandemic, is that its source was microbes left over from the first pandemic (the Justinian plague) that had moved eastward and remained endemic for 7 centuries in voles, marmots, gerbils, and the highly susceptible black rats (Rattus rattus) of the arid plateau of central Asia (roughly corresponding today to Turkestan). Plague-infected rats moved westward along the caravan routes between Asia and the Mediterranean known as the Silk Road, and in this way plague traveled from central Asia, around the Caspian Sea, to the Crimea. There the rats boarded ships and moved from port to port and country to country, spreading plague to the human populations living in filthy, rat-infested cities. This has been described poetically in Robert Browning’s poem “The Pied Piper,” which is based on a legend that on June 26, 1284, the German city of Hamelin became infested with rats. A Pied Piper comes to Hamelin and agrees to rid the city of rats for payment of a large sum of money. He is able to enchant the rats by playing his flute, leading them to the river, where they drown. But when the city fathers refuse payment, the Pied Piper leads the children to a cave, where they disappear. Versions of the tale were gathered by the Grimm brothers (1812), and this plague-inspired tale has over time come to have a moral interpretation: evil will befall those who do not carry out their promises.
Simond’s hypothesis was that the transmission of plague was from the black rat (R. rattus) via the rat flea (X. cheopis) to humans. This has been the accepted scenario for decades. Recently, however, this has been called into question. First, there is a complete lack of evidence of the involvement of rats and rat fleas in the historical epidemics in Europe; and second, the speed of transmission of the epidemics was very different: while the medieval epidemics spread extremely rapidly, the modern epidemics spread rather slowly. Although rats may have been important in warmer countries such as China and India, in northern Europe there are no historical references to rats. For example, there is no mention of rats during the plague epidemics in London during the 1600s, and Samuel Pepys, who in his diary described trifling events in great detail, makes no mention of sick or dead rats. It is the view of Hufthammer and Walløe that there were in fact very few rats in northern Europe at the time, and collections of ancient rat bones suggest that they were patchily distributed. It has been proposed that the Black Death cannot be attributed to a singular introduction of Y. pestis but to repeated climate-driven reintroductions from a reservoir of gerbil populations in Asia into Europe via caravans. It is hypothesized that since rats were uncommon in medieval Europe it is unlikely that they were responsible for the dissemination of human plague during the second pandemic. Instead, it is suggested that the mode of transmission of Y. pestis during the time of the Black Death was not, as shown by Simond, via the black rat and the rat flea X. cheopis (during the third pandemic), but rather directly from human to human by the human flea Pulex irritans and the human body louse Pediculus humanus humanus. Hufthammer and Walløe add that “they were present in all European countries and in sufficient numbers to be real candidates during ancient human epidemics” and that they were present in people’s clothing and bedding in the Middle Ages and early modern times. Further, it has been shown experimentally that P. irritans is capable of transmitting plague from a dying human plague victim to guinea pigs and rats and that Y. pestis can remain in soil in burrows dug by small mammals.
According to this hypothesis, plague was carried over long distances by people in their clothing and in the wool and other goods they transported. It was caravans passing through Asian plague foci that were responsible for transporting plague between Asia and Europe; camels are known to become infected relatively easy from infected fleas in plague foci and can transmit the disease to humans. After a plague infection established itself in a caravan (in its animals, in the traders or in in fleas in its cargo) the disease could have spread to other caravans during the time when goods and animals were redistributed and transported across Eurasian trade routes.
This hypothesis, the authors claim, unlike the rat model, can account for the rapid spread of plague epidemics and also explains why all members of one household in a town might have become plague victims while neighboring households escaped. The maritime import of plague is most evident during the second pandemic in the isolation of ships before unloading their cargo, and the black rat may have played a role in maintaining plague outbreaks on ships as well as importing plague into harbors, but its role as a potential plague reservoir in Europe can be questioned.
DNA sequences obtained from skeletons in Germany spanning the 14th to 17th centuries suggest that plague outbreaks in Europe did not arrive from the East but rather that a virulent strain of Y. pestis remained (or was reimported) for several centuries in Europe, while over time it worked its way back to Asia, causing outbreaks and killing millions in 19th-century China, including the one that reappeared in 1994 in epidemic form in countries including Malawi, Mozambique, and India, and that afflicts Madagascar today.
The Disease of Plague
At present, most human cases of the plague are of the bubonic form, which results from the bite of a flea, usually a flea that previously fed on an infected rodent. The bacteria spread to the lymph nodes (armpits and neck but frequently the area of the groin), which drain the site of the bite, and these swollen and tender lymph nodes give the classic sign of bubonic plague, the bubo. Three days after the buboes appear, a high fever develops, the individual becomes delirious, and hemorrhages in the skin result in black splotches. Some contend that these dark spots on the skin gave the disease the name Black Death, whereas others believe “black” is simply a mistranslation of pestis atra, meaning not “black” but rather a “terrible” or “deadly” disease.
The buboes continue to enlarge, sometimes reaching the size of a hen’s egg, and when these buboes burst, there is agonizing pain. Death can come 2 to 4 days after the onset of symptoms. In some cases, however, the bacteria enter the bloodstream. This second form of the disease, which may occur without the development of buboes, is called septicemic plague. Septicemic plague is characterized by fever, chills, headache, malaise, massive hemorrhaging, and death. Septicemic plague has a higher mortality than does bubonic plague. In still other instances, the bacteria move via the bloodstream to the alveolar spaces of the lungs, leading to a suppurating pneumonia or pneumonic plague. Pneumonic plague is the most feared form of the disease and is the only form of the disease that allows for human-to-human transmission. It is characterized by watery and sometimes bloody sputum containing live bacteria. Coughing and spitting produce airborne droplets laden with the highly infectious bacteria, and by inhalation others may become infected. Pneumonic plague is the rapidly fatal form of the disease, with a fatality rate of 100% and death occurring within 24 h of exposure.
Some have suggested that the nursery rhyme “Ring around the Rosie” refers to bubonic plague in 17th-century England.
Ring around the rosie,
A pocket full of posies,
Achoo! Achoo!
We all fall down.
The rosies are the pink body rash, posies the perfumed bunches of flowers used to ward off the stench of death, “achoo” is the coughing and sneezing, and death is signified by “we all fall down.” The first time this rhyme was suggested to be plague related was in 1961, however, and because there is no evidence of a version prior to 1881, it is unlikely that the rhyme actually relates to the plague.
Y. pestis is one of the most pathogenic bacteria: the lethal dose that will kill 50% of exposed mice is a single bacterium that is injected intravenously. Typically, Y. pestis is spread from rodent to rodent by fleas, but it can also survive for a few days in a decaying corpse and may persist in a frozen body.
The reasons for the high degree of pathogenicity of Y. pestis remain unclear, however, though some virulence factors have been identified. The genes of Y. pestis are located on one chromosome and a virulence plasmid (a circular DNA molecule). Located on this plasmid are